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  1. #1
    Forum Regular pixelthis's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Smokey
    Just found out that over half of my local stations have HD feed and was wondering to myself where are the all the HD radios to receivers the signal?

    The only option we have as now to listen to HD feed is to buy an expensive HD tuner, a HD radio table top or in only couple of A/V receivers (such as Denon). I don’t know why FCC don’t make it mandatory for manufactures to include a HD tuners in their receivers. They did it for TVs.

    What is the hold up?

    (hdradio.com)

    Go to crutchfields site, they have answers to your questions.
    At newegg a sangean tuner is 179 bucks, hardly a bank breaker, but adding that
    to every receiver would be prohibitive.
    And this is a private project, the govt has nothing to do with it.
    probably the way HDTV should have been done
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  2. #2
    Forum Regular Woochifer's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by pixelthis
    Go to crutchfields site, they have answers to your questions.
    At newegg a sangean tuner is 179 bucks, hardly a bank breaker, but adding that
    to every receiver would be prohibitive.
    For a receiver, I doubt that the cost of adding HD Radio capability would be anywhere near $179. Since car audio head units with HD Radio tuners are already available for around $100, the costs on that Sangean tuner would have more to do with how much of the upfront licensing fee (and other component costs) they choose to pass onto consumers than the chipset costs. For example, when Dual added a HD Radio tuner to one of its car audio head units, the revision only added $20 to the list price.

    Quote Originally Posted by pixelthis
    And this is a private project, the govt has nothing to do with it. probably the way HDTV should have been done
    The FCC still had to approve iBiquity's HD Radio proposal before it could move forward, and they retain a regulatory role. This is no different than the HDTV standard, which was developed by a consortium of broadcasters and private companies, standardized by the ITU, and approved by the FCC. If you're referring to the mandatory DTV transition, that's a totally different subject than how the HDTV standard was developed in the first place.
    Last edited by Woochifer; 04-24-2008 at 12:08 PM.
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  3. #3
    Forum Regular pixelthis's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Woochifer
    For a receiver, I doubt that the cost of adding HD Radio capability would be anywhere near $179. Since car audio head units with HD Radio tuners are already available for around $100, the costs on that Sangean tuner would have more to do with how much of the upfront licensing fee (and other component costs) they choose to pass onto consumers than the chipset costs. For example, when Dual added a HD Radio tuner to one of its car audio head units, the revision only added $20 to the list price.
    "Only twenty dollars".
    THATS FUNNY.
    When THE mts stereo standard was adopted it wasnt much, had poor channel seperation,
    And the dbx name on it, but it was better than nothing.
    RCA shaved off the name DBX name and changed things around, the savings were
    about a dime a tv(or something like that) they didnt care about the worsened sound.
    THE CHANGE netted them MILLIONS.
    THAT "twenty dollars" is huge, and what I was talking about, sure it wont cost 179 bucks to add an HD tuner, it might be less than 20 bucks, but if its ten bucks the cost would be huge for manufacturers.
    Ten bucks (let alone twenty) over a hundred thousand players is a MILLION bucks after all



    The FCC still had to approve iBiquity's HD Radio proposal before it could move forward, and they retain a regulatory role. This is no different than the HDTV standard, which was developed by a consortium of broadcasters and private companies, standardized by the ITU, and approved by the FCC. If you're referring to the mandatory DTV transition, that's a totally different subject than how the HDTV standard was developed in the first place.

    how quickly they forget.
    Before the crash at the end of the eighties Japan was a jugernaunt, literally an economic Godzilla.
    You think their stuff now is nice, I had a Pioneer receiver with splitscreen, you could adjust the video and see an adusted and unadjusted version on your screen.
    And Japan had the only viable HD tv system.
    It was analog and took up one and a half channels, and was sat based, but there was real fear that they would be the owner of HD tech, and the thought was that we needed our
    own HD SYSTEM. Economics and national pride was at stake.
    Zenith and General instruments and a few others got the ball rolling, true, but the govt was behind the scenes, and has been HD friendly ever since.
    Without their influence HD wouldnt be nearly as far along.
    HD radio, on the other hand, most dont even know it exists
    The adoption of HDTV and HDRADIO were completely different things
    One was the Manhatten project, the other a fireworks stand
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  4. #4
    Forum Regular Woochifer's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by pixelthis
    "Only twenty dollars".
    THATS FUNNY.
    When THE mts stereo standard was adopted it wasnt much, had poor channel seperation,
    And the dbx name on it, but it was better than nothing.
    RCA shaved off the name DBX name and changed things around, the savings were
    about a dime a tv(or something like that) they didnt care about the worsened sound.
    THE CHANGE netted them MILLIONS.
    Not true. The MTS standard has always had the dbx processing circuitry in it, whether the name was on the box or not. As more licensees came onto the market, manufacturers had more supplier choices and could obviously go with lower cost vendors if they chose to do so. But, anything conforming to the MTS standard had to license the dbx noise reduction in the process.

    Zenith partnered with dbx to jointly develop their stereo TV format. When the competing stereo TV proposals were getting forwarded to the FCC, the Zenith/dbx proposal won out, because the dbx circuitry allowed for greater audio performance than the other proposals, including better S/N ratio and channel separation than FM radio. Both companies have been collecting the licensing revenue since then.

    Quote Originally Posted by pixelthis
    THAT "twenty dollars" is huge, and what I was talking about, sure it wont cost 179 bucks to add an HD tuner, it might be less than 20 bucks, but if its ten bucks the cost would be huge for manufacturers.
    Ten bucks (let alone twenty) over a hundred thousand players is a MILLION bucks after all
    That $20 is what the cost spread on the list price is right now, and what one company (Dual) chose to pass along to consumers at this juncture. That's not what the actual unit cost differential is -- it's what Dual presumes consumers will pay to get the HD Radio feature.

    Recall that the first production stereo TVs all cost substantially more than previous monophonic models, a lot more than $20 even on the successors to those "stereo ready" console models that already used two speakers. As production volumes ramped up, the cost differential reduced over time until the stereo capability became nothing more than just another commodified feature.

    Also remember that the first standalone MTS decoders cost $200 ($350 in today's dollars) when they came out in 1984. Not much different than what you see right now with that $179 standalone Sangean tuner.

    Price points on midlevel receivers have been inching up over the last three years to begin with. Satellite radio tuners, networking features, and video processing have bumped up the price points on the midlevel models anywhere from $200 to $400. As more of them add HD Radio tuners, I doubt that the price points will get bumped up much further, since those other functions are now more commodified and trickling down into the entry level models.

    Plus, it's easier to absorb that kind of cost on an item that sells for more than $1,000 versus something that lists for $170 (and sells for $100). If more and more manufacturers add HD Radio tuners to their receivers, the remaining manufacturers won't exclude the feature just to save a few bucks. Same thing happened when DTS, DD EX, and Pro Logic II came onto the market. The processors incorporating those formats added to the material and licensing costs, but receiver manufacturers absorbed those costs because those costs were nothing compared to the potential loss in market share as consumers went with receivers that did add those features.
    Last edited by Woochifer; 04-29-2008 at 12:23 PM.
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  5. #5
    Forum Regular pixelthis's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Woochifer
    Not true. The MTS standard has always had the dbx processing circuitry in it, whether the name was on the box or not. As more licensees came onto the market, manufacturers had more supplier choices and could obviously go with lower cost vendors if they chose to do so. But, anything conforming to the MTS standard had to license the dbx noise reduction in the process.
    Zenith partnered with dbx to jointly develop their stereo TV format. When the competing stereo TV proposals were getting forwarded to the FCC, the Zenith/dbx proposal won out, because the dbx circuitry allowed for greater audio performance than the other proposals, including better S/N ratio and channel separation than FM radio. Both companies have been collecting the licensing revenue since then.
    Were you alive back then, or asleep?
    RCA, (and all of its subsideraries) dropped DBX, and adopted a much cheaper alternative
    that had even less channel seperation than the DBX version.
    DVX and ZENITH had a liscense for "their" solution to mts decoding, but the govt couldnt force anyone to pay liscensing fees to anyone for something they had to have due to govt regulation.
    I WAS THERE, SAW THE SETS IN THE FRIGGIN STORES, read the reviews in the magazines, RCA DIDNT use dbx, didnt put the dbx trademark on their sets.
    EVER.
    And saved a ton of money in the process


    That $20 is what the cost spread on the list price is right now, and what one company (Dual) chose to pass along to consumers at this juncture. That's not what the actual unit cost differential is -- it's what Dual presumes consumers will pay to get the HD Radio feature.
    And is probably more than the cost of putting HD radio into the sets, otherwise they wouldnt be doing it

    Recall that the first production stereo TVs all cost substantially more than previous monophonic models, a lot more than $20 even on the successors to those "stereo ready" console models that already used two speakers. As production volumes ramped up, the cost differential reduced over time until the stereo capability became nothing more than just another commodified feature.
    Its been awhile but I dont remember the cost being that much different, really


    Also remember that the first standalone MTS decoders cost $200 ($350 in today's dollars) when they came out in 1984. Not much different than what you see right now with that $179 standalone Sangean tuner.
    Heres the answer to your confusion, you're from another planet.
    The dollar has lost AT LEAST three fourths of its value in the last twenty years,
    and that is just the official, doctored stats from the govt.
    Anything costing 200 bucks in 1984 bucks would be 800 in todays bucks, at least.
    Electronics today are cheaper due to increased efficiencies and improved tech

    Price points on midlevel receivers have been inching up over the last three years to begin with. Satellite radio tuners, networking features, and video processing have bumped up the price points on the midlevel models anywhere from $200 to $400. As more of them add HD Radio tuners, I doubt that the price points will get bumped up much further, since those other functions are now more commodified and trickling down into the entry level models.
    Prices wont be "bumped" much further because in the future only stripped models will be sold, because thats all that will be able to be sold.
    RETAILERS ARE HURTING BADLY NOW, MUCH MORE than has been let on,
    with food and gas and other nessesaries soaring through the roof, a car stereo is going to be waaaay down on the list


    Plus, it's easier to absorb that kind of cost on an item that sells for more than $1,000 versus something that lists for $170 (and sells for $100). If more and more manufacturers add HD Radio tuners to their receivers, the remaining manufacturers won't exclude the feature just to save a few bucks. Same thing happened when DTS, DD EX, and Pro Logic II came onto the market. The processors incorporating those formats added to the material and licensing costs, but receiver manufacturers absorbed those costs because those costs were nothing compared to the potential loss in market share as consumers went with receivers that did add those features.
    This is econ 101, so whats your point?

    You are saying that HD will be added to radios, and that others will add them just to keep up.
    This presumes that HD will catch on, something that hasnt happened yet.
    Thing is, you are limited by the number of stations with HD, with sat radio you have a lot more choices.
    And for the home there is internet radio, cable, etc.
    I get 40 channels over cable commercial free that beats the pants off of HD, and did I mention they are connercial free?
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  6. #6
    Forum Regular Woochifer's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by pixelthis
    Were you alive back then, or asleep?
    RCA, (and all of its subsideraries) dropped DBX, and adopted a much cheaper alternative
    that had even less channel seperation than the DBX version.
    DVX and ZENITH had a liscense for "their" solution to mts decoding, but the govt couldnt force anyone to pay liscensing fees to anyone for something they had to have due to govt regulation.
    I WAS THERE, SAW THE SETS IN THE FRIGGIN STORES, read the reviews in the magazines, RCA DIDNT use dbx, didnt put the dbx trademark on their sets.
    EVER.
    And saved a ton of money in the process
    Oh I was very much following the development of stereo TV back then. Some of the details seem to have been lost on you obviously, since your grasp of the facts seems to have ended with whatever you saw in the stores. You were there, right -- like you were in the RCA factories and board rooms when they were selecting their supplier vendors?

    Like I said, there were multiple suppliers for the decoding circuits that came into the market, but the basic encode/decode process was licensed by Zenith and dbx, whether that trademark was on the box or not. Even if RCA opted for a cheaper solution, the noise reduction built into the MTS standard was still a dbx process and required a royalty payment somewhere along the way, whether that was paid directly by RCA or by whatever supplier vendor they chose to procure the stereo decoding circuitry. The dbx patent was still in effect when the MTS standard was adopted, so every TV sold with MTS stereo required a royalty payment to dbx.

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Multich...levision_sound

    The govt. didn't force anyone to pay the royalties, since manufacturers that didn't want to pay those royalties could simply opt not to make stereo TVs. The FCC approves standards with proprietary technologies all the time, just look at communications standards like HD Radio and even Wi-Fi -- all of them have some form of a patent pool that requires royalty payments. The FCC can choose to approve one standard like they did with stereo TV and HDTV, or they can choose to approve all of them like they did with the disastrous AM stereo formats (a tuner capable of playing all four AM stereo formats had to license the decoders from four different consortia, one of many reasons why AM stereo failed).

    Quote Originally Posted by pixelthis
    Its been awhile but I dont remember the cost being that much different, really
    The prices were very different, because the first sets with MTS stereo were the higher end models. The Sony console TVs added about $100 when those models were updated to include the MTS decoder. There were no other changes to account for that cost increase since the previous year's models were "stereo ready" with multiple speakers and built-in audio inputs for outboard stereo TV decoders. The price differential was about that much for smaller TVs as well, partly because those TVs had to change from one speaker to multiple speakers.

    Quote Originally Posted by pixelthis
    Heres the answer to your confusion, you're from another planet.
    The dollar has lost AT LEAST three fourths of its value in the last twenty years,
    and that is just the official, doctored stats from the govt.
    Anything costing 200 bucks in 1984 bucks would be 800 in todays bucks, at least.
    I might be from a different planet than you, but my planet is Earth, not so sure about yours! The inflation numbers I'm quoting are from the UNITED STATES, which is a nation on PLANET EARTH. Your dollars obviously come from a different source than the ones that I spend!

    http://stats.bls.gov/cpi/home.htm

    Quote Originally Posted by pixelthis
    Electronics today are cheaper due to increased efficiencies and improved tech
    Sure, but the spending power of a dollar has little to do with productivity increases in one industry segment.

    Quote Originally Posted by pixelthis
    Prices wont be "bumped" much further because in the future only stripped models will be sold, because thats all that will be able to be sold.
    There's no need to bump up the price points because they have already gone up. The price points in the HT receiver market had held steady for nearly a decade until manufacturers began adding satellite radio, networking, and video processing features over the last few years. Those features have bumped up the price points on the midlevel receivers by at least $200.

    The midlevel market will always be there because the laundry list of features that some consumers are willing to pay for will continue to expand. Manufacturers can afford to add new features like HD Radio because the unit costs on other features like satellite radio will continue to decline as those functions get integrated into multifunction circuits. Basic DD and DTS decoding used to be done on separate chips from the DSP functions, now they are all combined onto one chip, which reduces the unit cost.

    Quote Originally Posted by pixelthis
    RETAILERS ARE HURTING BADLY NOW, MUCH MORE than has been let on,
    with food and gas and other nessesaries soaring through the roof, a car stereo is going to be waaaay down on the list
    Actually, the market for aftermarket car stereos ($2.4 billion in 2006) is more than double that for home audio components ($1.1 billion). This is why the mobile market matters more for HD Radio, since that sales tally doesn't even include factory-installed OEM systems.

    Quote Originally Posted by pixelthis
    You are saying that HD will be added to radios, and that others will add them just to keep up.
    This presumes that HD will catch on, something that hasnt happened yet.
    It's already catching on in the car audio market. Satellite radio didn't make its way into home audio components until XM and Sirius successfully penetrated the mobile market and became a factory-installed option on new cars, and HD Radio will likely follow a similar progression. They got Ford, Hyundai, BMW, Mercedes, Mini, Scion, and Volvo already on board.

    Quote Originally Posted by pixelthis
    Thing is, you are limited by the number of stations with HD, with sat radio you have a lot more choices.
    Already got over 1,200 stations broadcasting in HD Radio, and each of those stations can multicast up to five simultaneous feeds onto a single frequency.

    Quote Originally Posted by pixelthis
    And for the home there is internet radio, cable, etc.
    I get 40 channels over cable commercial free that beats the pants off of HD, and did I mention they are connercial free?
    But, unlike cable or satellite radio, once you buy your tuner the content itself is free (and currently, most of the multicast channels are also running commercial free), and unlike satellite radio, you don't have to pay separate activation and monthly changes with each additional radio.
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  7. #7
    Forum Regular pixelthis's Avatar
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    Not getting into another long drawn out debate with a hardheaded type who refuses to pay attention.
    No I wasnt on "RCA'S boards deciding things, but it was pretty much public knowledge ,
    and in every review of an RCA product I read, they came up with a way to exclude DBX,
    used a stereo solution that had even worse channel seperation than the DBX chip,
    and saved them a ton of money,
    THIS WAS PRETTY MUCH PUBLIC KNOWLEDGE AT THE TIME.
    You had to pay a liscense fee if you used dbx, but RCA didnt use DBX,
    didnt put it on their sets, or IN them.
    And as for the dollar, do some research, my estimate was fudged from the actual,
    truth is, the dollar has probably lost more than 3/4 of its value in the last twenty
    years.
    WHEN GAS recently went up the papers reported that it was, after inflation, THE SAME AS 1980.
    In 1980 it was a dollar or so, now its three plus.
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